Fantasy, 4 pages.
Originally Published in Rosebud Magazine, 2005 Rate this Story

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[Preview]

Father always loved myths. Tales of great battles and victories. Gentle fables of love and loss. Stories. Only they mattered.

I enjoyed the stories, too. For my favorite pastime, I curled up beside Father on the sofa, as he read to me from Tolkien, Dante, Homer. Even now, I recall his scent, musty old books and a far-off tang, like storm-cleared air over the sea. He always twisted his moustache as he read, often nibbling on its ends. But those legends never engulfed me as they did him. I would listen, laugh, cry. Then I would play outside with my friends, abandoning him in the musty living room.

His favorite story remained Gilgamesh, the part-divine being who quested for immortality after the gods stole his best friend. I always wondered if the story reminded him of Mama, who died in a car crash when I was six.

Father read me Gilgamesh over and over, until I could easily recite it from memory. Other stories, too. Castor and Polydeuces placed in the sky by Zeus as the constellation Gemini, when they could not bear to part. Jack Popcorn, the Hungarian lad who became king of Fairyland and reunited with his lost love, Iluska. But Father always returned to Gilgamesh.

When I was 16, Father developed cancer. He had less than a year to live. I remember the sadness, the hopelessness in his voice when he told me. I felt as though an icy cold ocean, one that I could never hope to escape, was swallowing me up, like the kraken of Father’s tales. He didn’t want to die, he said, throwing one of his cherished books onto a chair. He would find a way to escape. He would chain death up, like Sisyphus had bound Thanatos, and he would live forever.

My Aunt Beatrice, Mama’s younger sister, told me that denial was a normal response. She held me close in her bread-and-butter scented arms and said that I should let him work through it on his own. I tried. But he didn’t work through it. As time went on, his determination engulfed him, to cheat, to escape death’s clutches.

My aunt finally persuaded him to see a counselor. “Death is natural,” the counselor said, hair stretched back in a bun until I could see through the skin of her face. “It’s the normal ending of life. I understand your anger, but you have to move past it.” Father stopped visiting the counselor.

Finally, I went to him, and asked, against Aunt Beatrice’s advice, how he planned to cheat death. “I must remain awake,” he replied, meeting my eyes with his deep blue gaze. “For six days and seven nights. After that, the gods will grant me immortality, in recognition of my great deeds.” I easily recognized the words I had learned so many years ago.

I shuffled my feet. “But, Father, Gilgamesh was a mighty warrior, who slew Humbaba, and chopped down the Great C -- [End of Preview.]